Abstract
This paper presents the first large-scale investigation of the users and uses of WorldCat.org, the world?s largest
bibliographic database and global union catalogue. Using a mixed-methods approach involving focus group
interviews with 120 participants, an online survey with 2,918 responses, and an analysis of transaction logs of
approximately 15 million sessions from WorldCat.org, the study provides a new understanding of the context
for global union catalogue use. We find that WorldCat.org is accessed by diverse population, with the three
primary user groups being librarians, students and academics. Use of the system is found to fall within three
broad types of work-task (professional, academic, and leisure), and we also present an emergent taxonomy of
search tasks which encompass known-item, unknown-item, and institutional information searches. Our results
support the notion that union catalogues are primarily used for known-item searches, although the volume of
traffic to WorldCat.org means that unknown-item searches nonetheless represent an estimated 250,000
sessions per month. Search engine referrals account for almost half of all traffic, but whilst WorldCat.org
effectively connects users referred from institutional library catalogues to other libraries holding a sought
item, users arriving from a search engine are less likely to connect to a library
Users
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